<\/a>Climbing
out of her plane at the 1938 Bendix Air Race<\/p><\/div>\n
Cochran applied this same attitude to her flying lessons. Having been told
that learning to fly would take two to three months, she accepted a wager
from her future husband, Floyd Odlum, that she couldn\u2019t complete it in
just six weeks. Three weeks later she finished flight school and got her
wings. Within months she was entering some of the world\u2019s most
prestigious air races.<\/p>\n
A decade later she took this same determination into the US military. Having
previously worked with the British Air Transport Auxiliary and been the
first woman to fly a bomber across the Atlantic, Cochran proceeded to gather
evidence to back her claim that female pilots were more than capable of
filling all the domestic flight roles left empty during the war. With her
experience training women to fly for the ATA, and drive to see them made a
part of the Army Air Corps, Cochran eventually oversaw the creation of the
Women Airforce Service Pilots, a group of just over a thousand pilots who
collectively would cover 60,000,000 miles in every kind of military
aircraft.<\/p>\n
Following the war, Cochran upgraded to piloting jet engined aircraft and set
one of her many records, becoming the first woman to break the sound
barrier. Flying a modified Canadian jet up to over 45,000 feet, she made a
dive towards the ground, not quite managing to break the barrier on her
first attempt. When asked when she\u2019d like to make a second attempt,
Cochran reportedly responded \u201cLet\u2019s go right now!\u201d The second
attempt did the trick, a sonic boom echoing over the landscape as Cochran
accelerated her jet towards the ground and passed Mach 1. Consider for a
moment just how nerve-wracking an experience it has to be, accelerating a
thin metal tube towards the ground from 45,000 feet, trying to get up faster
than almost anyone had ever gone. Then consider just how badass you have to
be to do that twice in one day, because the first time just wasn\u2019t
quite fast enough.<\/p>\n
What other records and achievements did Cochran manage? Alongside a list of
speed and altitude records long enough to keep us here for several days, she
was also the first pilot to ever make a \u2018blind\u2019 landing using only
instruments, and the first pilot to fly above 20,000 feet with an oxygen
mask. She was the first woman to enter the prestigious Bendix
Trans-continental Air Race, and the first to win it, along with many other
famously difficult air races throughout her career. Perhaps her most
especially daring records were set during her flights of the F-104
Starfighter, in which she set no less than three speed records in the space
of a month.<\/p>\n
The F-104 was a staggeringly dangerous craft to fly. In the first 18 months
of its use the German Air Force had 85 fatal incidents involving them,
earning it the nickname \u2018The Widowmaker\u2019. When a plane is killing
off pilots at a rate of almost two a week you have to be exceptionally brave
to climb into the cockpit even once, and exceedingly skillful to survive the
experience often enough to set a handful of world records. Jackie Cochran
was both.<\/p>\n
In addition to her contributions to aviation Cochran maintained a successful
cosmetics business (indeed, it was to promote her \u2018Wings\u2019 line of
cosmetics that she initially learned to fly). Following the war she poured a
lot of her time and money into charitable causes, particularly those
providing education and opportunity for those coming from impoverished
backgrounds. Whilst she never gained the fame or attention of
Amelia
Earhart<\/a> <\/strong>(whose organisation of female pilots, The
Ninety-Nines, Cochran presided over between 1941 and 1943), Cochran left a
legacy as a successful businesswoman and one of the most daring and
important pilots to have lived.<\/p>\n